June 28, 2017 โ The March Bay Journal 2017 commentary, Donโt let menhaden become a case of could have, should have, would have, laments the decline in Bay menhaden populations and blames the reduced number of predatory โsportโ fish on Omega Proteinโs harvest.
The Atlantic States Marine fisheries Commission is quite clear this year that โAtlantic menhaden are neither overfished nor experiencing overfishingโ (asmfc.org/species/atlantic-menhaden).
In Maryland, juvenile menhaden are sampled annually through the Estuarine Juvenile Finfish Survey. The index of juvenile menhaden has been low since 1992, and โenvironmental conditions seem to be a major factor driving recruitment.โ (dnr.maryland.gov/fisheries/Documents/Section_4_Atlantic_Menhaden.pdf).
Something other than overfishing must contribute to, or even be responsible for, reduced Bay menhaden populations. I contend that the primary cause of depleted finfish stocks, including bottom-feeding fish like croaker that do not eat menhaden, and the menhaden themselves, is poor water quality, not overfishing.
As a child in the late 1940s, I recall visiting my uncleโs cottage on the water near Solomons Island, MD, where we caught large bluefish and rockfish. He would give me a quarter to pull up eelgrass from under his boat so the propeller wouldnโt chop it up and foul the engineโs water pump. Dense meadows of grass were obvious beneath the clear water. I doubt there is much eelgrass anywhere near Solomons Island today and Bernie Fowlerโs โWade-Inโ documents turbidity and the fact that there has been no recent improvement.
I moved to Virginiaโs Northern Neck on the Little Wicomico River, near Smith Point, in 1998. At that time, I could exit the jetties and turn to the southeast into about 30 feet of water and easily catch large croaker, as well as spot, trout and flounder. I havenโt caught fish there, nor seen them on the depth sounder, in many years.
The pound nets nearby still catch menhaden for crab bait, although they are smaller than fish in the past. They no longer catch many โfood fish.โ
In about 2000, big Omega trawlers fishing for menhaden were common up to the Maryland-Virginia line. Now, I never see the trawlers and most of the plentiful menhaden are being caught outside the Bay, where the population is robust. In late summer, schools of Spanish mackerel and bluefish once chased bait on the bar west of Smith Point Light. Casting into the schools, as they were being worked by birds, or trolling beside them, was great fun and very productive. No more.
Spanish mackerel, my favorite fish, are no longer abundant and I rarely see birds actively working the water. Trolling for big rockfish was almost always successful a decade ago. Lately it is more often unsuccessful, although a few are still being caught.